> bond two output transformers at the secondary?
#2: "my friend wrap it by himself". While the total kilos of metal will be similar, the labor will essentially *double*. (More than double, because smaller cores need more turns.)
> that way each valve gets the proper load
It won't be "proper load".
I assume he has just the one speaker, isn't swapping speaker impedances while he turns the 6L6 drive pot. Assume 8 Ohms for example.
What is proper load?
Assume 250V supply.
6V6 will want just shy of 250V 50mA thus a 5K load.
For simplicity, assume two 6V6, one constant and one variable drive.
One tube working wants a 5K:8r OT.
Two tubes working wants two 5K:16r OTs. So that 16||16 makes the 8 Ohms we will load with. Alternatively: one 2.5K:8, so each of two tubes sees 5K load.
6L6 will pull 250V 100mA and so a 2.5K load. Both 6V6 and 6L6 together should be a 1.66K load.
So what is the intention? MAX power in either condition? Probably not. What happens with a single 1.6K load? The 6V6 alone wants 5K, so with 1.6K the Watts will be down and the THD will be up. Probably 1.5W-2.5W max depending how much THD you tolerate. Now crank the 6L6 up and you may get 13 Watts from both tubes. That *may* be the intent. A ~~2W small bedroom amp plus a ~~12W small stage amp at the turn of a dial.
While 6V6 and 6L6 sound a little different, in this combination I think the "sound" will be more about the compromised loading than the basic tubes. Which is why I suggested some way to change the loading in the try-out stage of the build.